Facade

I was thinking just this morning how absurd it is that the world of IT, to a large extent, accepts M$ as the font of all knowledge in IT. That is an absurdity. Locutus had the same idea recently. Why do people who suffer malware, slowing down, unbootability, crashes and re-re-reboots keep buying from the same unreliable suppliers? Too many seem not to know there is a choice. The retailers fall into that category. If they know there is a choice they would stock it just like they do tires.

Imagine what would happen if Goodyear started selling only tires for Hummers? Would you go out and buy a hummer? That’s what M$ wants folks to do with “7”. We only sell “7” so you’ll have to go out and buy a new PC to get it. 90% do not install an OS so they have to buy a PC to get “7”. We would laugh at Goodyear and buy some other brand. That’s what folks should do with operating systems. Buy a different brand. You’ll get what you pay for and not some lock-in to a monopoly.

There are plenty of folks selling PCs with another OS. Just use Google or go to LXer. The most popular brand of GNU/Linux for newbies is Ubuntu on desktops and notebooks and Android for smart-thingies. Ubuntu really makes an effort to produce a system easy for newbies. Once you are comfortable with GNU/Linux in Ubuntu, I would recommend Debian GNU/Linux because it gives much more control over the system. Android is a quite different GUI placed on top of GNU/Linux designed specifically for smart-thingies. It is probably the best OS for smart-thingies because of the huge number of applications you can get for it.

Do not accept the facade of Wintel. There are other platforms out there and they will work for you. You will be able to save money and/or get better hardware too.

One more thing. There are folks who believe “you get what you pay for” in software licences. Consider this. M$ spent $billions developing Vista and “7” after XP. They recoup all their costs every quarter or two. So you pay for more than what you get with that other OS. GNU/Linux also costs $billions to produce and you get it at no cost for the licences, just the cost of copying and installation. You can do it yourself. Typically, a download burnt to a CD from which you boot gets the job done. It takes about half an hour for a newbie on a newer PC. An older PC might take an hour or a bit more. How can GNU/Linux cost so little? The world needs software and can make its own. There are far more people contributing to GNU/Linux than to that other OS and each gets to use the whole thing. They let you use if for free because they make their living by other means than selling licences. It’s that simple. Developers who are paid to write software do not need to sell you a licence. The employers of those developers need the software their employees produce to run their businesses. They are not in the business of selling licences. GNU/Linux is a cooperative product of the world. Think cooperation, not licensing fees. The licence under which most GNU/Linux is distributed is the GNU GPL (GNU Public Licence) which gives you permission to use, examine, modify and copy/distribute the software. GNU calls it Free Software, not because of the price but because of those four freedoms. It’s just a better way to do IT.

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About Robert Pogson

I am a retired teacher in Canada. I taught in the subject areas where I have worked for almost forty years: maths, physics, chemistry and computers. I love hunting, fishing, picking berries and mushrooms, too.

FOSS OS’es and software are also going to be hard two kill on two other diversity factors, one many organizations have a hand in producing/contributing to it from the likes of Big Corporations IBM, RedHat, and Google, to non-profit foundations (Mozilla, GNU/FSF) to university labs, to individual basement coders, a very broad spectrum group. Two the FOSS movement is very international and is getting a critical mass of users (which translates into contributers about 5-10 years later) in such places as Russia, China, India, and Brazil along with Germany, Sweden (home of Linux), the US, Canada, and on and on…many of these places have a more egalitarian view (saner?) that IP is a commons to be applied for the good of all, so attempts by proprietary powers to lock things down by copyright or patents is just going to shift the development balance to IP-shackle free havens. Personally the FOSS way of things I think is going to go viral invading the means of doing business in areas out side executing code. Open textbooks and courseware, band music being offered up a loss-leaders, academic papers being published on open forums. We also are seeing a parallel movement towards content creation moving to the masses, “Big Buck Bunny” and “Sintel” created by users using Blender is pointing the way to near-Pixar level quality movies being released by enthused hobbyists; it’s going to happen with 5 years. Same on the hardware front, while the entrenched powers speak of no net neutrality and bandwidth caps; enthused hobbyists using municipal wifi, mesh based wifi, laser-based mesh, IP over Ham, to end-run around private networks.

My Mission

My observations and opinions about IT are based on 40 years of use in science and technology and lately, in education. I like IT that is fast, cost-effective and reliable. I do not care whether my solution is the same as yours. I like to think for myself.

My first use of GNU/Linux in 2001 was so remarkably better than what I had been using, I feel it is important work to share GNU/Linux with the world. I have been blessed by working in schools where students and school systems have benefited by good, modular software easily installed in most systems.

I have shown GNU/Linux to thousands of students and hundreds of teachers over the years and will continue in some way doing that until I die in spite of the opposition.